teleamp
August 19th, 2009, 11:19 PM
Foreword, without the love and support of my mother, I would not have this guitar. I am blessed to be alive and have this beautiful instrument. That said...
I have had my Country Boy since April, and the honeymoon is far from over. I wanted a good D-18 sounding guitar and this is like getting a pre war instrument IMHO. The sound is full and extremely balanced. I use a fairly thick real tortoise shell pick with this guitar and it sounds like a lot of recordings... In he past I have had a later model D-18 and a D-18V. I actually preferred the D-18 over the D-18V which was too boomy. The Country Boy is like having the sweetest sounding D-18 you have ever heard. The fit and finish is a cut above the Martin counterparts. The fretwork is as good as any at any price.
The Country Boy is rather plain jane for a high end guitar, but that only adds beauty in my eyes. It has an ebony fretboard, ebony bridge and small fret markers.
I restrung it a couple of months ago and haven't had to retune it. It has Waverly tuners, this is my first experience with them and I am impressed. Bourgeois dreads come with a "bluegrass" setup and at first I thought I was going to have to have the action lowered, but I have adapted and like not having any fret buzz.
The guitar can handle a heavy pick without distorting and sounds equally impressive with a light touch at low volumes.
If it were lost or stolen, I'd sell body parts to get one, it's that good!
http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i115/teleamp/100_1458.jpg
I have had my Country Boy since April, and the honeymoon is far from over. I wanted a good D-18 sounding guitar and this is like getting a pre war instrument IMHO. The sound is full and extremely balanced. I use a fairly thick real tortoise shell pick with this guitar and it sounds like a lot of recordings... In he past I have had a later model D-18 and a D-18V. I actually preferred the D-18 over the D-18V which was too boomy. The Country Boy is like having the sweetest sounding D-18 you have ever heard. The fit and finish is a cut above the Martin counterparts. The fretwork is as good as any at any price.
The Country Boy is rather plain jane for a high end guitar, but that only adds beauty in my eyes. It has an ebony fretboard, ebony bridge and small fret markers.
I restrung it a couple of months ago and haven't had to retune it. It has Waverly tuners, this is my first experience with them and I am impressed. Bourgeois dreads come with a "bluegrass" setup and at first I thought I was going to have to have the action lowered, but I have adapted and like not having any fret buzz.
The guitar can handle a heavy pick without distorting and sounds equally impressive with a light touch at low volumes.
If it were lost or stolen, I'd sell body parts to get one, it's that good!
http://i70.photobucket.com/albums/i115/teleamp/100_1458.jpg
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